Poinar G O, Columbus J T
Department of Entomological Sciences, University of California, Berkeley 94720.
Experientia. 1992 Sep 15;48(9):906-8. doi: 10.1007/BF02118433.
Discovery of a female spikelet of the grass genus Pharus (Gramineae: Bambusoideae: Phareae) in association with mammalian hair in Dominican Republic amber provides the first fossil evidence of epizoochory. Hooked macrohairs on the lemma of the spikelet show that morphological modifications in grasses for dispersal by attachment to the surface of animals were present in the Late Eocene. The fossil also represents 1) the second-oldest undoubted macrofossil record of the Gramineae, 2) the earliest record of a fossil grass that can be assigned to an extant genus, 3) the earliest undoubted record of a member of the bamboo subfamily and 4) the only known fossil of Pharus.
在多米尼加琥珀中发现一种草属(禾本科:竹亚科:Phareae)的雌性小穗与哺乳动物毛发在一起,这提供了首例种子通过动物传播( epizoochory)的化石证据。小穗外稃上的钩状大毛表明,在始新世晚期,禾本科植物就已出现通过附着在动物体表进行传播的形态学特征。该化石还代表了:1)禾本科第二古老的无疑义大化石记录;2)最早可归入现存属的禾本科化石记录;3)竹亚科成员的最早无疑义记录;4)Pharus属唯一已知的化石。